Tim Cornwell: Brigadoon and a Brave new world
Connolly is among the all-Scottish voice cast of animated film Brave. Picture: SNS
CALL me a jaded cynic – alright, it’s been done. But when Scotland’s energy, enterprise and tourism minister describes an animated Hollywood film as a “once-in-a-century” marketing opportunity, is it the best way to sell Scotland to the world?
Fergus Ewing was at the John McIntyre conference centre this week, to launch the 2020 Edinburgh Tourism Strategy. Put together by business and tourism leaders, it mostly laid out worthy but dry financial goals, like generating an additional 4.15 visitor nights for the capital and pushing visitor spend up by 50 per cent, to £1.5 billion a year. The new extension to the Edinburgh International Conference Centre was about as sexy as it got.
But Ewing dwelt at some length on how he had watched Pixar’s Toy Story films 30 or 40 times with his daughter. This revelation ran into a long spiel about Pixar’s new film, Brave, set in a fantasy Scotland and voiced by an all-Scottish cast. The Edinburgh connection was not immediately clear.
Brave, he said, was going to be bigger than Toy Story – a $200 million film, released in 72 different countries . It was a once-in-a-century opportunity for the tourist trade. He said the film would be watched by several hundred million people worldwide, many 30 or 40 times. With Brave, said Ewing, it will be “you’ve seen the movie, now seen the country”.
Brave, released this summer, is the story of Princess Merida, with a fountain of curly flame-red hair, set in a mythical Medieval Scotland, mostly – from the trailer – the Highlands. She’s a tough little anti-Princess, and an archery champion.
The film is voiced by Scottish stars: Kelly MacDonald as the Princess, Billy Connolly as her father, King Fergus, Craig Ferguson, Kevin McKidd, Robbie Coltrane as bristling Scottish lords.
It was conceived by Brenda Chapman, a Pixar veteran with Scottish roots, with location visits here by the animators. After initially planning a “generic northern European feel”, she said in a recent interview: “We thought, Oh, to heck with it, let’s just say it is Scotland”. Connolly came on board and the makers “decided to stop beating about the bush”.
Emma Thompson, who once said she “feels Scottish”, plays Merida’s mum, Queen Elinor. Relations between the rebellious redhead and her mum’s determination to make her conform, and marry, are the film’s driving narrative. There’s also the 12ft bear that ate her father’s leg.
Ewing is by no means first in the Scottish Government to bang on about Brave. Dr Mike Cantlay, chairman of VisitScotland, calls it “just huge”. First Minister Alex Salmond has taken a close interest.
Here’s the theory. The trailer for Brave, all we’ve seen so far, is laden with tartan, and features Highland Games, craggy mountains and lakes. There’s a tall stone circle in the trailer that looks distinctly Orcadian, though placed among bushy trees.
No mention yet of where Edinburgh comes in. It leaves you wondering what the ministers have got up their sleeve. Are there dreams of a theme park, here or in Florida?
Braveheart sent visits to the Wallace Monument soaring. Lord of the Rings saw tourists converging on New Zealand. The Da Vinci Code ruined the quiet, mysterious beauties of Rosslyn Chapel by turning it into a mecca for tourists obsessed by a dreadful thriller.
Do animated films really sell countries? The Australian Tourism Commission launched a marketing campaign tied to Finding Nemo. There was a mini-boom in tourism on the East Coast of Australia in 2003, with people swimming off to “find Nemo”. My memory is more of a rush to buy clown fish.
Normally in these situations you might warn: wait for the reviews. Brilliant ingredients don’t mean a brilliant show. Brave has a darker feel than previous Pixar outings, it is said, and is the company’s first fairytale. Ewing himself wondered aloud how Billy Connolly is going to sound in Swahili, Urdu or Mongolian. If they translate the voices, do they translate the accents?
In the mid 1990s, with the release of Disney’s Pocahontas, about an early settler’s love for an Indian princess, Virginia’s US heritage sites went big on the branding. But plans for “Disney’s America”, a patriotic Virginian theme park, fell through.
Brave will sell millions of red-headed Merida dolls with archery kits. But will it sell the kind of “authentic” Scottish experience, which was the other buzzword at the conference, or are we peddling Brigadoon-style Highland Games with archery tournaments?
- Family mourn death of Glasgow ‘fight’ schoolboy
- Rangers takeover: Duff & Phelps threaten legal action against BBC
- Today’s youth not fit to be employed, says car firm Arnold Clark
- Rangers administration: Fans fear Duff & Phelps claims could scare off Green
- Rangers takeover: triple penalty punishment enough, says Johnston
- Alistair Darling leads ‘No to independence’ fight over tea and biscuits
- Scottish independence: SNP flip-flops over Nato
- Scottish Independence: SNP ‘won’t be Yes campaign’s only voice’
- Today’s youth not fit to be employed, says car firm Arnold Clark
- Scottish independence: ‘People here are best qualified to run Scotland’
Looking for...
Featured advertisers
Jobs
Search for a job
Motors
Search for a car
Property
Search for a house
Weather for Edinburgh
Saturday 26 May 2012
Today
Sunny
Temperature: 9 C to 20 C
Wind Speed: 16 mph
Wind direction: North east
Tomorrow
Sunny
Temperature: 12 C to 22 C
Wind Speed: 10 mph
Wind direction: North east


Comments
There are 8 comments to this article
Page 1 of 1
Faceless_bureaucrat
Thursday, April 5, 2012 at 06:42 PMIf you have it, then flout it.
Pauline
Wednesday, March 14, 2012 at 09:47 AMYour first 5 words say it all
Pauline
Wednesday, March 14, 2012 at 09:46 AMYour first five words say it all
JPJ2
Friday, March 2, 2012 at 09:43 AMMacPravda battling to undermine Scottish interests and aspirations yet again-who would have thought it????
samcoldstream
Friday, January 27, 2012 at 07:55 PMThe author of this piece will be aware that in 1943 and 1944 Olivier's triumphalist Henry V, was filmed in the neutral Irish Free State. After the war, and during a period of austerity, the infant forerunner of Bord Failte, the Irish Tourist Board, was surprised to find thousands of Brits and parties of overseas visitors wanted to see the film's outside locations which were shot on a beautiful private estate owned by an Aglo-Irish landowner near Enniskerry, County Wicklow? The film was suggested by Churchill and funded by the Wartime British Coalition Government. The Free State government supplied hundreds of its soldiers as extras in the battle scenes and the famous Dublin Players took many of the minor parts. The film may have starred and been directed by Olivier with many English actors in tuhe main roles but it was almost an entirely USIrish production team. To this day, Enisskerry in County Wicklow still benefits from this tourist attraction. (Source: Variety Magazine)
gus1940
Friday, January 27, 2012 at 09:02 AMOne of these days this rag may surprise us by printing a Scottish story with a positive slant but I won't be holding my breath in anticipation..
shug57
Friday, January 27, 2012 at 02:39 AMA Scottish character with red hair.That's original.
The fucking Shitesman
Friday, January 27, 2012 at 12:56 AMComment removed by moderator
Page 1 of 1
Your view
Please sign in to be able to comment on this story.